BCBusiness

February 2018 Dr. Cannabis

With a mission to inform, empower, celebrate and advocate for British Columbia's current and aspiring business leaders, BCBusiness go behind the headlines and bring readers face to face with the key issues and people driving business in B.C.

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bcbusiness.ca FEBRUARy 2018 BCBusiness 31 V al Litwin enjoys telling a story about a meal he had this past summer in Tum- bler Ridge in northeastern B.C. And no, it's not to com- plain that his eggs were a little more over-easy than he would have liked. "I had breakfast with the president of a metallurgical coal mine and the facility manager of a wind farm," recalls Litwin, presi- dent and CEO of BCBusiness partner the BC Chamber of Commerce. "And the wind farm guy said, 'If only people understood I need a couple tonnes of his metallurgical coal to make each wind turbine I have.'" Since Litwin took the helm at the BC Chamber in late 2016, he's tried to foster har- mony between the province's technolo‡y-driven urban industries and its more traditional rural jobs. It hasn't always been a simple task, given the perception that big cities such as Vancouver and Victoria function separately from the resource- based economy in the Interior and the north. "Where there's a gap, and where the unhealthy narrative has unfolded, is that perhaps the average person on the street doesn't understand how con- nected they are," Litwin says. "If you're at a Šve-star restaurant in Vancouver and your perfectly done medium-rare steak reaches your table, you may not know that the beef came from the Thompson- Okanagan region, or that the natural gas that ‹ame- broiled it came from the northeast." Those who work in industries that depend on this rural-urban interplay know how much the two economies need each other. That's a fairly new development. Just ask Dan Baxter, the BC Chamber's director of policy development, government and stakeholder relations, who joined the advocacy group in 2013. "When I Šrst started, the relation- ship felt more combative; it was us versus them," Baxter says. "Some parts of the province don't necessar- ily feel they get their fair share, and that's obviously a fair conversation, but I think more and more people are coming at it from a point of view now of 'How do we grow together?'" Bruce Anderson, chair of Ottawa-based Abacus Data Inc., oversaw a poll of some 870 BC Chamber members last November. "In the past, you could see some cleavages between people who live in the smaller and mid-sized communities in the north- ern and eastern parts of the province who would think that all of the beneŠts were skewing toward the Lower Mainland and parts of the Island," the veteran pollster says of the annual Collective Perspective survey. "[Now] the numbers are pretty consistent in every region of the province." For example, the proportion of respondents in northern B.C. who called their business outlook for the next three to Šve years good or very good (67 per cent) closely tracked that in the Lower Main- land (78 per cent). Two Economies, One Provınce URBAN AND RURAL B.C. AREN'T SEPARATE WORLDS. AS WE LEARNED By TAP- PiNG THE BC ChamBer of CommerCe NET- WORK, THEy'RE iNCREASiNGLy iMPORTANT TO EACH OTHER urban.rural. b y N A T H A N C A D D E L L + N I C K R O C K E L

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